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“We must always remember that Islamism is a symptom of a far bigger problem infecting our lands. Spend some time navigating this website if you believe groups like the EDL and women like Pam Geller are on our side. They are as evil and dangerous to our nations as Islamic fundamentalism.” Jack Sen, former UKIP parliamentary candidate and current BNP NW spokesman.

After the official rhetoric and laying of wreaths by senior political figures, nationalists gathered in London’s Hyde Park to pay their own personal tributes to the victims of the London Transport terror attacks.

The 7th July 2005 will be remembered forever, but particularly by those who dare to ask why Britain is singled out as a target for terror attacks. And why is it that Britain’s elected politicians seem so reluctant to even pose this question – let alone answer it?

Only by understanding the root of a problem can a solution be devised.’ Donna T.

On Thursday, July 7, 2005 – one day after London won the bid to host the 2012 Olympic Games, and the first day of the UK-hosted G8 summit – four suicide bombers detonated explosives in three locations in the central London subway network and on a bus, killing 52 people, and injuring more than 770.

The attacks began at 8:50 a.m. British Standard Time (BST), just as rush hour was coming to a close, with the final explosion taking place on a double-decker bus about one hour later. The bombers were later identified as British-born Islamist extremists.

The attack, the largest and deadliest the country had experienced since World War II, represented the first instance of British born and bred suicide bombers. It was also the first suicide bombing in Western Europe.

The Attacks: Four Explosions

The first three underground explosions occurred within fifty seconds of each other, beginning at 8:50 a.m. BST. The fourth explosion was detonated approximately one hour later, in Tavistock Square. The attacks killed 52 people, and injured more than 770.

Liverpool Street

At 8:50 a.m., a bomb exploded on an eastbound Circle Line train packed with commuters, between Liverpool Street and Aldgate stations. The explosive detonated at the rear of the second carriage, killing seven and injuring 171 people.The bomber, who also died, was later identified as Shehzad Tanweer, 22, from Leeds, West Yorkshire, England.

Edgware Road

Simultaneously, an explosion was set off in the second carriage of a westbound Circle Line train at Edgware Road, killing six and injuring another 163 people. The bomber, who also died, was later identified as Mohammad Sidique Khan, 30, from Dewsbury, England.

King’s Cross – Russell Square

Seconds later, a third bomb exploded in the rear of the first carriage of a crowded Piccadilly Line train traveling from King’s Cross to Russell Square. The blast killed 26 people and injured more than 340.

The bomber, who also died, was later identified as Germaine Lindsay, 19, from Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, England.

Tavistock Square

Nearly one hour after the three underground explosions, at 9:47 a.m., the final explosion ripped through the upper level of the No. 30 double-decker bus on Upper Woburn Place in Tavistock Square. The bomb, located near the back of the bus, killed 13 and injured more than 110 people. The explosion launched the roof of the bus into the air, and destroyed the rear of the vehicle.

Due to street closures resulting from that morning’s explosion at Russell Square, the bus was using an alternate route through Tavistock Square. Many who had evacuated the Underground had crowded onto public surface transit as an alternative.

The bomber, who also died, was later identified as Hasib Hussain, 18, from Leeds, Yorkshire, England.

Initial reports suggested that the tragedy had been caused by a power surge in the underground power grid, but within hours of the explosions, Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair stated that evidence at the blast sites pointed to a terrorist attack.

“This was not a terrorist attack against the mighty and the powerful. It was not aimed at Presidents or Prime Ministers. It was aimed at ordinary, working-class Londoners, black and white, Muslim and Christian, Hindu and Jew, young and old. It was an indiscriminate attempt to slaughter, irrespective of any considerations for age, for class, for religion, or whatever.”

About

The EKP act as a counter to the prevailing Marxist bias in the media, academia & western culture.

We seek to bring honourable men & women of all ethnicities together under the banner of Western 'culturalism', national patriotism, love for Western civilisation, the preservation of our unique cultures, Christian heritage & individual national sovereignties.

We seek to re-instil pride in people through the promotion of European high culture & by exposing the Marxist and internationalist mechanisms employed to subjugate us.

We are inspired by the fact that the only culture PROHIBITED from having pride, is the one that's given the globe the most.

The people that built the Roman & British empires, colonised North America, Australia New Zealand, built South Africa from a spit of sand to the great nation it once was - have seen their accomplishments denigrated. We at the EKP think this is unfair.

Still, we are not a white supremacist site or hate group and condemn all forms of racism.

If you want unapologetic pro-Western views, penned by elite Western men with conservative & traditional Western European values, that value honour, believe in the natural order, & fight to preserve what's worthwhile in our shared western civilisation, then you're in the right place.